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Query: UMLS:C0027497 (
nausea
)
23,468
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This paper presents in detail the symptomatology and findings on examination of 642 patients suffering from a variety of lower gastrointestinal disorders, such as colonic and rectal cancer,
diverticular disease
, Crohn's disease, and ulcerative colitis. Location of precise sites of abdominal pain and tenderness was shown to carry a high level of diagnostic discrimination between the various disorders. Some surprising features emerged: almost half of patients with lower gastrointestinal tract disease complained of symptoms referable to the upper gastrointestinal tract, such as
nausea
/vomiting or anorexia. It is suggested that the provision on demand of such data to junior staff may benefit both diagnostic ability and decision making. As an incidental finding, just under 40% of patients with large bowel cancer had undergone previous (unrelated) abdominal surgery. The significance of this is unclear.
...
PMID:Clinical presentation of diseases of the large bowel. A detailed study of 642 patients. 124 82
The characteristics and the prevalence of functional bowel disorders in the general French population are unknown. Based on an epidemiological inquiry in a random population of 1,200 persons who were not seeking care, residents in our country we established: the prevalence of symptoms suggestive of functional bowel disorders; the epidemiological differences between symptomatic subgroups which included abdominal pain with or without bowel dysfunction, diarrhea and constipation. The amount of cases and the prevalence in each subgroup were: abdominal pain, 165, 13.8 p. 100, painless constipation, 75, 6.3 p. 100, diarrhea, 10, 0.8 p. 100. As a whole, functional bowel disorders occurred in 20 p. 100 of our population. The "irritable bowel syndrome" group defined as abdominal pain and/or diarrhea differ from normal subjects by the following higher frequency of age under 50, subjects in active duty, antecedents of
diverticulosis
, influence of stress on symptoms,
nausea
, vomiting, migraines, pyrosis and number of visits to a doctor. However neither the sex-ratio nor professional occupation were relevant. The constipation group differed from normal because of the higher frequency of female sex, antecedents of hiatus hernia, use of laxatives but not because of age nor by the number of associated symptoms. In conclusion, functional bowel disorders occurred in 20 p. 100 of our population; two subgroups were clearly different from an epidemiological point of view, the irritable bowel syndrome (13 p. 100) and constipation (7 p. 100); therefore these two groups deserve a specific physiopathological, psychological and therapeutic approach.
...
PMID:[Epidemiology of intestinal functional disorders in an apparently healthy population]. 395 14
Fifty-eight patients with uncomplicated
diverticular disease
of the colon took bran crispbread, ispaghula drink, and placebo for four months each in a randomised, cross-over, double-blind controlled trial. Assessments were made subjectively, using a monthly self-administered questionnaire, and objectively, by examining a seven-day stool collection at the end of each treatment period. In terms of a pain score, lower bowel symptom score (the pain score and sensation of incomplete emptying, straining, stool consistency, flatus, and aperients taken), and total symptom score (belching,
nausea
, vomiting, dyspepsia, and abdominal distension) fibre supplementation conferred no benefit. Symptoms of constipation, however, when assessed alone, were significantly relieved. Both fibre regimens produced the expected changes in stool weight, consistency, and frequency. It is concluded that dietary fibre supplements in the commonly used doses do no more than relieve constipation. Perhaps the impression that fibre helps
diverticular disease
is simply a manifestation of Western civilisation's obsession with the need for regular frequent defecation.
...
PMID:Are fibre supplements really necessary in diverticular disease of the colon? A controlled clinical trial. 626 96
We describe the case of a 58-year-old man who presented to the hospital with central abdominal pain,
nausea
, fever, chills, and dyspnea. While in the hospital, jaundice appeared and the liver function tests revealed features of both cholestasis and hepatocellular injury. He developed gram-negative septicemia and died on the sixth hospital day. Autopsy disclosed a perforated terminal ileal diverticulum and a contiguous mesenteric abscess. There was also severe phlebitis of mesenteric venous radicles which extended superiorly to the intrahepatic portal venules and veins. The portal veins were surrounded by multiple hepatic abscesses that varied in size from microscopic to 2.5 cm. This appears to be the first report in the world literature of suppurative pylephlebitis and hepatic abscesses resulting from a perforated ileal diverticulum. The subject of small bowel non-Meckelian
diverticulosis
is reviewed because of the rarity of this condition and the diagnostic challenges it poses.
...
PMID:Perforated diverticulum of the terminal ileum. A previously unreported cause of suppurative pylephlebitis and multiple hepatic abscesses. 642 54
Jejunal
diverticulosis
is an uncommon condition, but it is often associated with a number of symptoms including postprandial abdominal pain, distension, flatulence, borborygmus,
nausea
, vomiting, diarrhea and constipation and with complications such as vomiting blood or coffee grounds material, melena and shock. The authors report such a condition in a 71-year-old man. Resection is the treatment of choice for relieving symptoms, and for preventing or treating complications.
...
PMID:Jejunal diverticulosis. 676 77
Laparoscopic procedures have changed the indications for appendectomy. Routine exeresis should not be performed if a normal organ is observed during an exploratory procedure, but should be in cases with clinical manifestations of right flank pain since neurogenic appendicitis is not rare. We report a recent case observed in a 76-year-old woman. The patient was initially hospitalized for right flank pain with
nausea
and irregular episodes of diarrhoea. Clinical examination and complementary exploration led to cholecystectomy via subcostal access. On per-operative cholangiography the common bile duct appeared normal. Immediate follow-up was uneventful and the patient was discharged. Twelve days later, the patient complained of the same type of abdominal pain and was hospitalized with a fever at 38 degrees C and shivers. The right flank was very painful at palpation. Echography and computed tomography eliminated a subphrenic abscess or secondary pancreatitis. Pain localized at MacBurney's point 8 days later. Barium study showed a normal colon with the exception of uncomplicated
diverticulosis
. Subjective pain persisted and appendectomy was decided. Pathological examination revealed neurogenic appendicitis. First described in 1924, neurogenic appendicitis is relatively frequent. Macroscopically, a sclerous fibromyxomatous nodule obliterates the lumen. Microscopically, the central obliterating lesion is composed of hyperplastic nervous tissue in a fibromyxoid matrix, particularly important at the point of the appendix. Clinically neurogenic appendicitis is usually chronic and the appendix appears healthy in situ. Cure is always achieved with resection. Laparoscopic procedures can identify para-appendicular causes of painful abdominal syndromes and sclero-atrophic appendicitis, but in the absence of another explanation exeresis appears to be justified due to the possibility of neurogenic appendicitis.
...
PMID:[Neurogenic appendicitis. A case]. 793 31
A 38-year-old para 2 presented with the gradual onset of
nausea
vomiting and increasing left lower quadrant pain, at 33 weeks' gestation. She was known to have uterine leiomyomas, with ultrasonography depicting an 8-cm intramural fundal leiomyoma. In addition a left lateral nondiscrete 10 x 8-cm mass was depicted at the point of maximum tenderness. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) demonstrated
diverticulosis
of the descending and sigmoid colon. The patient remained afebrile and received repeated doses of intramuscular analgesics and was cleared by the surgical consultant, only to be readmitted with similar symptomatology 24 hours later. Subsequently, following repeat discharge she delivered at 34 weeks' gestation, and developed a small bowel obstruction during the immediate postpartum course. With the continued finding of a left lower abdominal mass and computed tomography findings suggestive of perforated sigmoid diverticulitis and resulting small bowel obstruction, laparotomy was performed. Multiple adhesions and phlegmon sequelae of chronic perforation of the sigmoid were confirmed, and a diverting descending colostomy and Hartman's procedure were performed. We present unusual MRI findings of diverticulitis in the third-trimester and review the literature pertaining to this unusual complication of pregnancy.
...
PMID:An unusual case of diverticulitis complicating pregnancy at 33 weeks' gestation. 1138
Physical exercise is probably both beneficial and harmful for the gastrointestinal tract, depending partly on the training intensity. On the one hand, gastrointestinal symptoms such as heartburn, chest pain,
nausea
, vomiting, abdominal cramps, side ache and diarrhoea are common during heavy exercise. On the other hand, physical activity seems to protect from colon cancer, cholelithiasis and
diverticular disease
. Constipation has been shown to be related to inactivity. Despite this, no overwhelming evidence exists for a positive effect of physical exercise as a treatment option for chronic constipation. The reasons behind these somewhat discrepant effects are not understood fully. Altered gastrointestinal blood flow, effects on gastrointestinal motor function, neuroendocrine changes and mechanical effects are probably involved. Conflicting results exist regarding the effects of physical activity on gastrointestinal motility. Modern technologies now make motility studies in various parts of the gastrointestinal tract possible. More studies are needed to understand better the effects of physical exercise on the gastrointestinal tract. In particular, the relationship between the training intensity and duration and positive and negative alterations in gastrointestinal physiology needs to be addressed further.
...
PMID:Physical activity and the gastrointestinal tract. 1236 4
A 77-year-old woman who had been examined 8 months previously because of chronic abdominal pain and an altered pattern of defecation presented to the emergency department with complaints of
nausea
, vomiting and acute pain in the abdomen. Her appetite was diminished and she had lost 10 kg in the past year. The abdominal X-ray showed a balloon-like, gas-filled intra-abdominal configuration, which proved to be a giant diverticulum of the sigmoid. She was treated by resection of the diverticulum and the sigmoid. A giant diverticulum is a rare complication of
diverticulosis
, a frequently occurring condition that is encountered most often in the sigmoid; the complication can easily be missed. The presenting symptoms can vary from an acute abdomen to chronic non-specific abdominal complaints. The most important complications of a giant diverticulum are perforation, obstruction or a volvulus. In view of the severity of these complications, resection of that part of the intestine in which the giant diverticulum arises is the treatment of choice.
...
PMID:[Giant diverticulum of the sigmoid]. 1514 55
We aimed to improve symptoms by means of mesalazine in symptomatic colonic
diverticular disease
patients. One hundred seventy outpatients (98 M, 72 F; age, 67.1 years; range, 39-84 years) were assigned to four different schedules: rifaximin, 200 mg bid (Group R1: 39 pts), rifaximin, 400 mg bid (Group R2: 43 pts), mesalazine, 400 mg bid (Group M1: 40 pts), and mesalazine, 800 mg bid (Group M2: 48 pts), for 10 days per month. At baseline and after 3 months we recorded 11 clinical variables (upper/lower abdominal pain/discomfort, bloating, tenesmus, diarrhea, abdominal tenderness, fever, general illness,
nausea
, emesis, dysuria), scored from 0 = no symptoms to 3 = severe. The global symptomatic score was the sum of all symptom scores. After 3 months in all schedules but Group R1, 3 of the 11 symptoms improved (P < 0.03); the global score decreased in all groups but Group R1 (P < 0.0001). Mesalazine-treated patients had the lowest global score at 3 months (P < 0.001). Mesalazine is as effective as rifaximin (higher dosage schedule) for diminishing some symptoms, but it appears to be better than rifaximin for improving the global score in those patients.
...
PMID:Efficacy of mesalazine in the treatment of symptomatic diverticular disease. 1581 Jun 46
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